ISLAMABAD: Over 120 Hindu couples tied the knot in the southern port city of Karachi on Sunday night, in a ceremony organized by the Pakistani Hindu Council (PHC) so that the poor can save mounting wedding expenses.
The Pakistan Hindu Council (PHC) has been organizing annual mass weddings for the past 16 years. For the purpose, they invite applications and shortlist the most deserving candidates based on income and social status.
Around 4 million Hindus live in Pakistan, or about 1.9 percent of the country’s population, and 1.4 million are in Sindh.
The 17th Combined Marriages Program as it was called, was held at Railway Ground at Pakistan’s busy I.I. Chundrigar Road where relatives of over 120 Hindu couples danced and sang to celebrate the festive occasion.
“I am getting married here because my parents are poor. They cannot afford the wedding expenses,” Kalpana Devi, one of the 122 brides chosen and financially supported by the minority NGO to get married in a mass wedding ceremony, told AFP.
“A wedding at home is the best but when a family chooses to hold a wedding here, they can give their daughter something better as a wedding gift.”
PHC head Ramesh Kumar Vankwani said the council selected 200 couples this year out of which it supported 122 couples “to the wedding day.” He added that the PHC received applications from all over the country.
“Our priority (in the selection) is given to fatherless couples or those whose father is physically disabled,” Vankwani told AFP.